Skip to main content

Supreme Court Will Not Rule on Power to Reject Expired Union Contracts

Submitted by jhartgen@abi.org on

The Supreme Court will not be deciding whether bankruptcy courts retain power to reject labor contracts after they have expired by their own terms, according to Rochelle’s Daily Wire today. In Hostess Brands Inc., Bankruptcy Judge Robert Drain from White Plains, New York, held in 2012 that the power to terminate a collective bargaining agreement ends when the contract expires, even though labor law requires the company to abide by the expired contract until the National Labor Relations Board declares impasse in negotiations. Judge Drain relied on the language of Section 1113. Focusing instead on the purpose of the statute, the Third Circuit held to the contrary in January and found power to reject an expired union contract in the reorganization of Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc. The union filed a petition for certiorari that the Supreme Court denied on May 31, likely because the Third Circuit was the first court of appeals to decide the issue. Read more

The Unite Here Local 54 v. Trump Entertainment Resorts Inc. case was a topic of discussion on last week’s “Eye on Bankruptcy” program. Click here to watch.